KrtJv '" --V- ---a vvr"-'- TJS-rtv -p-c- .-ww 4 '-- iji fl . ' - . ' i n i i ' aaai ii i ii i win i iii E-. -T Pic A ) 1 HOME OF THE -0 s'UC BjaMajaswaaweaaStiMMaawaiMMMKg. i Tir li'wpMawiwiMiBiiSBhHjjMBB IB 2 it 451 "-iill ml?mmmmml i ;mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmymi sVmslHBm -.. w 'a.' ;f fBsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmma v It-lfc.' immWJmmmmmmmmVmmmmmmmsPBBmmi mmmmmmmmmmmTgaa& A4 vf HEBH Bsmmmirailt tKaKssjs? smmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmms BsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmW- amMmmssT'M w miil,lliiiiMuiiLV,r tBYsmmsmmmmmm'"TjBn' ,faTawmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmf - mfJlmfaw v - ' ' i-'-TfEf' HeiBsmmmmmeammes ' L3vIm HivmmmmsLem- 'ikHHnflKl yij&jiyyy j-HffiPrHB? Ki1 mEMemKXweHB"BKmmmmti I k " r- v ''AwOr ' i mvHIII ml mV' lsmmr- I j'jSkr x5 5mr BsUfsn mi-mmasM smav lBmmw-ZiIBar vL"- mjBHI'9 mB'mmmmT smmmmmmmmmmmmsmw - ' BsmmlmmK mmvljimsl BmmmmmmmmmmmmmmBW i' YammBsw mmvmm? f ''mmv gmmmmmmmmmmmmvm ' 'HmmmmmmmLMm&lZ:Bm; U '''S?- Bmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ftTsmmmmmmmmmmmmmSBBB yCjKk t'rom rtcrt-oKraph. coryneht, ly L'mlerwood & Underwood, If. T. Looking east from a window of the Navy department building showing White House with Executive office in the foreground. ftXa' yOsxsssyjffYffrr-r MAINE HAS COMMUNITY OP TEMPERANCE ADVOCATES THRIVES. Vice Unheard ef In Benedict Is Without Jail, Poorhouse, Fres from Debt and Has Cash on Hand. Boston. Benedicts, in Maine, is the Roman Catholic Utopia and the dream of the W. C. T. U. come true. It is tabloided Home Rule. Irish Catholics settled in it. Their descendants, sturdy Americans, run it. Only- Cath olics live there now, and probably only Catholics will ever live there. It is crimeless, jatlless. poorhouseless, free from debt and ideally adminis tered. As a community Benedicta is more ideal than Moore's "Utopia" or Ba con's "Xew Atlantis." Though 40 miles from an) other town and 100 miles from a railroad. Benedicta has electric light service, a municipal water supply, several fine buildings, and all the conveniences of a thor oughly modern city. Benedicta is not only free from debt, but has a surplus in the treas ury. Moreover there is not a poor family in the place and there never has been any occasion for the estab lishment of any of the usual institu tions for the poverty stricken or peace breakers. When Fenwick started bis colony he purchased more than 12,000 acres of fertile timber lands, comprising the western half of a township in Aroostook county. There he began to build up an ideal community of temperance residents. Though many of the younger gener ation have gone to cities for work, leaving their elders on farms, the cen sus of 1900 showed that the colony numbered 350 persons. PIE WILL SOON Pure Food Law Will Raise Price of Desert and Other Things. Washington. The operations of the federal pure food law are plainly going to add still further to the cost of living in American homes. How much the increase will be can only be esti mated thus far. The manufacturers whose products and methods 3U require to be changed In order to comply with new regulations can only guess at the ex pense of the changes. But speaking lfnadly, the use cf preservatives and coloring matter has made it possible to sell many staple articles to the public for less money than they can be sold for when these are not used. Take the single list of canned fruits and vegetables, pickles, preserves. Jams, jellies, catchups and the like. Coloring and preserving matters are used in these. Some manufacturers rlaitn to produce them without pre servatives, but the housewife who wants to know how much is saved by the privilege of using these things will be able to learn by asking her grocer the difference in price between n-inn n 1" i " .. ... Only One Service a Year. Story of m Curious Little Church en an English Hilltop. London. There stands upon a hill in the village of Uphill, in the comity of Somerset, a small and very old church, which is surrounded by caves fn which the bones of all kinds of ani mals have been discovered. This his toric place of worship, which looks down upon Uphill castle and the vil lage Itself, was at one time the only place of worship for miles around. For several years no Sunday serv ices have been held within its walls, and the only time that the public is allowed to worship there is one night in the year on Christmas eve when the vicar of Uphill or some other cler gyman officiates. There is a footpath leading up the hill to the church, but as the hill is a very steep one and the distance great very few people visit the church. It is by order of the ec clesiastical commissioners that it is opened to the public once a year. Carious stories are told regarding PRESIDENT A UTOPIA Benedicta got its charter as a town in 1874, the name being bestowed in honor of its founder. The nearest place where any liquor can be bought is Houlton. 44 miles away through the woods to the east, and the nearest point of railway con nection is Bangor, more than 100 miles to the south. NEW RECORD IN JUNE BRIDES. One Every Thirteen Minutes for the Month in Chicago. Chicago. While you read these words, stop and think! Chicago has 3,300 June brides to-day! The love bug has been working overtime and has broken all records. Three thousand three hundred June brides! That means 110 brides a day or one every 13 minutes! Hymen, Cupid & Co. report the most prosperous month since the firm was established. Last year there were 3,103 June brides; in 1905. 2,907; 1904, the record was 2.758. Marriage License Clerk Salmonson. the man who has opened the door of wedded happiness to hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Chicagoans and others, preached a little lay ser mon the other day for June brides. These are the points on which he laid stress: 1. Love your husband always. 2. Be his companion, his friend, his chum. 3. Never, never ce suspicious or nagging. 4. Study his tastes and give him what he likes. 5. Get up and cook his breakfast for him. 6. Make his home as attractive for him as you can as attractive as the club or the saloon. BE A LUXURY. the goods that are guaranteed to be free from these seasonings and those which are not. She will learn that for the greater part the articles guaranteed to be free of such preservatives or coloring mat ter constitute the limited aristocracy of food articles, at prices which make them the luxuries of the comparative ly few. Pie at anjr rate is going up when ever sodium benzonate is denied to the makers of the insides. The slice which now sells at five cents will command ten, and the ten-cent por tion will go for not less than 15, ac cording to the dire predictions of the pie purveyors. Pie will become the .luxury of the rich rather than the staple of the bourgeois dyspeptic. Two Oldest Editors. John W. Oliver, of the Yonkers Statesmen, is said to be the oldest ac tive editor in the United States. Mr. Oliver will be 92 on April 30, yet he is on duty at his desk six days a week. The next oldest editor is said to be Charles Holt of the Kankakee Gazette, of Kankakee, Ind, who Is 90. this interesting edifice, one of which is to the effect that the church was purposely built on the top of the hill so that the preacher could feel con vinced of the sincerity of those who accomplished the task of climbing to it The church has been visited by people from all parts of the world, ft is the only building in England prob ably in the world in which Divine service is conducted only once a year. Sand Artists to Combine. Atlantic City, X. J. "Artists" who eke out a livelihood on the beach here by modeling figures in the sand, have organized a sort of "trust," to chase off the beach all would-be artists who they declare are spoiling their bus iness. Headed by James J. Taylor, the original sand artists will apply to Mayor Stoy to set aside a day for an open contest and thus weed out the undesirable element The seamstress' success should be" more than seaming. ' JEWS PLAN UNIQUE BANK. Profits to Be Given far Development ef Palestine. Tannersville, N. T. At the next session of the legislature of the state. of New York the Zionists will have a Mil presented authorizing the estab lishment of a bank in New York city, which will be unique in that it will be closed on Saturdays and the profits of which will be devoted to the devel opment of Palestine. A committee beaded by Natham Prensky, -a merchant of Brooklyn; Henry Jackson, of . Pittsburg, and Dr. B. L. . Gordon, of Philadelphia, re ported at jk session of the Zionista convention here that stock to the amount of $50,000 had already been subscribed for, with promises of a similar sum as soon as the back is established. One of the features of this bank will be a steamship broker age department which will serve to protect the poor and ignorant Jews of the East side of New York city from the frauds practiced on them by irre sponsible men. As soon as the bank in New York city ha3 been established .branches will be opened in Boston, Philadel phia, Baltimore, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Chicago and Cincinnati and in other cities where there are large Jewish settlements. It is anticipated that the profits of this enterprise will be so large that many projects for development of the industrial aad agricultural possibili ties of Palestine, which are now in abeyance, will be successfully carried out and the way opened for the set tling there of an enormous Jewish peasant population. TO SAVE THE COAL SUPPLY. Crude Methods of Production Have Caused Immense Waste. Washington. The government, through the United States geological survey, is planning with the producers of coal to place far in the distance the day when the country's coal supply shall be exhausted. Crude methods of production, with more attention paid to cheap production than to sav ing and scientific methods of mining, have resulted in an astonishing waste of coal. This will never be recog nized, for it lies buried deeply in abandoned mines now filled in. Also, it is planned to prolong and regulate, the supply of coal by new methods of mining, which will, no doubt, result in adding many years to the existence of the now available supply. The extravagance In the production of coal, amounting to almost criminal waste, has not had the effect of re ducing the cost to consumers. This, at least, is the opinion of Edward W. Parker, of the geological survey, who was a member of President Roose velt's coal strike commission, and pro bably is more familiar with coal con ditions than any man in the country. "One of the greatest problems to overcome in the production of coal, said Mr. Parker, "is a reduction in the waste of mining. Only a few years ago only 40 per cent of the coal in a mine was marketed. Sixty per cent was lost Cheap mining methods caused this waste. Under improved methods the waste has now been re duced to from 30 to 40 per cent" GIVES LOCATION OF THE SOUL. Man Who Hopes to Photograph It Says It Is in the Throat. New York. "The soul of a man is soft and gelatinous, small, practically shapeless, and situated beneath the first rib. Below the Adam's apple in a man, and in a woman at the base of her throat, is a spot of little or no re sistance. It is from this place when the hour of death has come that the soul must be taken. It does not pass like a shadow. It is not a flight The soul must be drawn out by an angel sent by God to perform this opera tion, and this seat of life is trans ferred, warm, palpitating, to a body the counterpart of the one it has left It is substance, material, and could be as well caught by the camera as the human face." It was thus that Henry Price of Mount Vernon explained recently his theory of the soul's passage and the possibility of obtaining a photographic reproduction thereof. "I do not think, by any means, that all men have souls. You may and may not have a soul, according as yon have merited it" 52 Gotham Murders In Month. New York. Four hundred and ninety-eight deaths were reported to the coroner's office in Jnne. Accord ing to the monthly report of Chief Clerk Jacob E. Bausch, 236 were due to violence or accident, the remaining 262 being sudden deaths due to nat ural causes. Of the deaths by vio lence or accident 52 were homicides and 29 were suicides. Thirty-nine bodies were found floating' in the rivers. Sixteen persons were killed by carriages or wagons, 15 by the street railways and three by automo biles. PAPER FROM CORNSTALKS. German Inventor Said to Have Salved the Pulp Problem. Berlin. The problem of providing for the enormous consumption of pa per caused by the immense number of newspapers and books published In our time, which cannot possibly be supplied much longer with the ma terial manufactured from wood pulp, has practically been solved, it is de clared, by a German engineer named Drewsen, who has invented a process through which all kinds of paper can be made out of cornstalks. The new process provides for the removal of the outside covering and the making of the marrow Into pulp, with which paper of the finest quality can be manufactured at a cost much lower than the wood pulp process at present in use. ' Owing to the large quantity of corn raised in every country of. the world, it is predicted that the new process will provide the world with all the paper It needs if the supply of wood should become exhausted. COULD HARDLY TOTTER .ABOUT. A Vivid Description of the Moat In sidious of Diseases. ' Miss Emma Shirley, Killbnck, N. T., "Kidney disease mysteriously fastened itself upon me two years ago and brought awful headaches and dizzy spells. I was all un strung; weak and nervous, could scarce ly totter about Pains in the side and back completely unnerved me. My food 'dis tressed me, I looked badly and the kidneys were noticeably deranged. I sank lower and lower until given np and at this critical time began with Doan's Kidney Pills. Details are un necessary. Twelve boxes cured me and I weigh six pounds more than ever before. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. MAN AND HIS WAYS. Fertile Brain Has Evolved a New Style of Cradle. A new cradle has been invented and by a man. Which latter state ment is a dedundancy for no up-to-date woman would really ever think of inventing anything so pernicious to her infant's welfare. Has she not be come enlightened to the dreadful ills of that time-honored institution of our ancestors? Dare she imperil the intellect that is to sway the twen tieth century by untimely "jugslins" in its embryo stage? Poor modern' babe! When colic's gripes assail, it may not know the luxury of a steady tramp swung across father's shoul derstrange to say, men do not jeer at this dictum of the new mother hood much less will it experience the bliss lot being lulled to rest in a wooden-slatted cradle or fluffy bassi net, swayed by the foot of a won dross being who swings and croons, swings aad croons, till baby woes are merged in blessed sleep. Its maker claims that sideways rocking is, in deed, injurious -to baby kins, but to bis eyes, not his brain. Therefore has he constructed a cradle that swings lengthwise, and is shaped like a boat: SCALY ERUPTION ON BODY. Doctors-and Remedies Fruitless Suf fered 10 Years Completely Cured by Cuticura. "Small sores appeared on each of my lower limbs and shortly afterwards they became so sore that I could scarcely walk. The sores began to heal, but small scaly eruptions ap peared. The itching was so severe that I would scratch the sores until .the blood began to flow. After I suffered thus about ten years I made a renewed effort to effect a cure. The eruptions by this time had appeared on every part of my body except my face and hands. The best doctor in my native county and many remedies gave no relief. All this was fruitless. Finally my hair began to fall out and I was rapidly becoming bald. A few months after, having used almost everything else, I thought I would try' Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Soap. After using three boxes I was completely cured, and my hair was restored, after fourteen years of suffering and an ex penditure of at least $50 or $60 in vain ly endeavoring to find a cure. B.' Hiram Mattingly, Vermillion, S. Dale, Aug. 18, 1906." Humming Birds in England. Considerable interest is excited by the humming birds now on view at the zoological garlens. Fifty-three' of these tiny, fragile birds were taken on board from Venezuela; many died on the voyage, but the fittest sur vived, and 20 reached Regent's park alive. At the time of writing 17 are shown In two large glass cages fur nished with flowering plants, and placed in the insect-house, which can be kept at a high temperature. Moths in a cage near look bigger than these small birds. It is to be hoped that these dainty feathered gems may take kindly to their new surroundings, and live long to delight the eyes of many dwellers in smoky London. West minster Gazette. How Pat Got In. Dr. George A. Gordon, pastor of the Old South church, Boston, tells how a witty Irishman stood before the gate of the other world, asking for admis sion. St Peter refused him, how ever, telling him he was too great a sinner to enter there, and bade him go away. The man went a little dis tance from the gate and then crowed three times like a rooster. , St. -Peter at once threw open the gate and cried out: "Come in, Pat! We'll let bygones be bygones!" Lippincott's. Did Not Prevent Raveling. The raveling of state highways in Massachusetts during dry weather has generally been prevented in the past by spreading a thin coat of sand over the surface. During last year, how ever, there were two quite protracted dry spells which disturbed the bond of the road and caused loose stones to stand up on the surface. Although sand was spread thinly as before, it did not prevent the raveling in all in stances. Engineer. Starch, like everything else. Is be ing constantly Improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat est discovery Defiance Starch-7-aIl in jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient in vented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap proached by other brands. Vacation. The secret of rest is to get rid of detail for a time. Why is it that a sea voyage is regarded as the best of tonics? Simply because the entire change of surroundings wipes out the mass of complications attendant upon the daily routine of the ordinary worker. We all need occasional free dom from the bondage of the tiny strings that bind us to wearing tasks. The man who realizes this and plans his vacation accordingly makes no' writes: sW lv Mc THE STORY OF A .WISCONSIN MAN IN WESTERN CANADA. Three Years Ago Worth Only $000; Tc-Oay Is Worth $1300. Theibllawing is'a copy of abetter, of which the Agents of the Canadian Government throughout the United States receive similar ones many times during the year: . , v Cayley. Alta Dee. 7, 190C Agent Canadian Government, Watertown, S. D. ' ., Dear Sir: Your letter dated Nov. 27th at hand and was very glad to hear from you. I see that yon are still at 'work per suading people to move into the Cana dian Northwest I must tell yon that I owe you many thanks for persuading me to come out here, am only sorry that I wasn't persuaded sooner, and there is still plenty of good chances for many more right at the present time. I hope that- you will be able to Induce more to make a start out to this part of the country. Now I must tell you what I have accomplished since I came out here and it won't be three years till the 1st of July. I shall shortly receive my patent for my homestead, the home stead cost me $10.00 in all, to-day it is worth $30.00 per acre, but it is not for sale. Then a year ago last May I bought 320 acres at $7.00 per acre and sold this fall for $20.00 per acre and cleared a profit of $4,160.00. How in that for the Northwest? I now have 320 acres of land and all paid for, 15 head of horses, 30 head of cattle, 22 pigs, 2 sheep and about 150 chickens and other poultry, and all new ma chinery and everything is paid for. We also bought 8 lots in Calgary and 7 In High River. We gave $470 for the 15 lots and they are paid for. At present I consider myself worth $13, 000.00. and when I left Wisconsin less than three years ago I had about $2,000.00. This year I threshed a little over 4,000 bushels of grain, have about one thousand bushels of fine potatoes and about five hundred bush els of turnips. Mrs. Beisiegel sold about $200 worth of garden truck and poultry this fall. Now there are lots of others in this community who did as well as I did in the same length of time. The family and myself are all well at this writing and hope this letter will find you the same. Yours very truly, (Signed) PHILIP BEISIEGEL, Cayley, Alta., Canada, Perhaps He Was the One to Blame. Hicks He first met his wife when he was on a camping trip down in the Maine woods, but their marriage isn't happy. Wicks Ah, I see. He mistook her for a dear. That an article may be good -as well as cheap, and give entire satisfaction, is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package con taining one-third more Starch than can be had of any other brand for the same money. Our idea of a charming' woman is one who is Ignorant of her charms. BBmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmBBRsnnMmaBnKsBmsc mf .vSnwW BBsV mSBBBBBBmhZ X. mm! mmmpV yLssmmvanav' mm mssmwSi m? ;1 J mm .V V A P TmW mmmmmmw i-A T-1 ?rehhwaBawasnBa BggSmSawav 14 1 r ggggSawawga BBBBBBBB r gmamamawTi mmmsmmy 11 smmmmmmsl mmmmmy m l" I iix mmmssmsTmi BmmmmT sj. i.i Uhf mmmn7'S'BB mnmnmnmv as .nmTav mrmamsfisaifli mamsmsa w j fni.- mnmsmsTSsvsi smmmsT w hi I-!' mmmafftfamwa mmmV I Ii I '" mmmmmflR mmmsf J iJ ' I ' mFfl smmmmmmmf I F I 9 Bmsmmmmwammmmmuw smmT wksaw 9 W " (d BKmsm?3kCsm23mSmmmaSnsf mmf tot. ? - Mi smmPlmgsfsjCTBgaW smm jsBsmsB fakk Jmmw HBmwImmmmBmmmbmmmTMJBmm smmmm . NMSlkM MTtABsmmnaamC,mwaTmnmmTJBM mmsmmW V VTSeXM MAsmmmMEaXHfiasHI smmmV ml ,r AgfirmUVsKC Jl sX. BsmmsrnBsmmwSmml r I MFf smm sa ENTICED BY THE BAR. Strsnuew Actions Mildly Explained by the Minister. .. Many..stories are told of thees centric doings and sayings of am old elergynun who lived In Maine some jears ago. At one tfsee there had bean a fight among some mem, one of whom was seriously hurt A trial took place, aad the old minister who had seen the affray was sum moned as a witness. . 'H "What was Salson doing?" was the first question. ., "Oh, he was slashing around. "WelL sir, jast what ao yon mean by that?" . 4 ' "Why, he was knocking about him here and there." "Now, sir, kindly tell as plain-, ly what Salson did to this man." "Why, he he enticed him," said the old minister slowly. "He enticed him with a crowbar. He used the crowbar to persuade the man to en tice him; and by a series of pokes and blows he succeeded in doing It said the minister, mildly. A Humane Horse Collar. Warm weather and heavy work ct.uces sore necks and shoulders, which prevent your horses from work ing, cr decreases their services by one half. With the use of the "Whipple" Humane Hcrse Collar, sore horses can be v.-orked every day, and the sores will heal at the same time. The same collar will fit any horse. Sold on 15 days' trial when used on sore horses. Mixed Voices. Alice had been to Sunday school foi the first time and had come home filled with information. She was over heard to say to her six-year-old sister, as she laid a wee hand over her heart, "When you hear something wite here, you know it is conscience w'ispering to you." "No such thing," responded Six-year-old; "it's just wind in your tum my." Lippincott's Magazine. . Important to Mi !ne carenny emy ootue or CASTOWXA. SMfeaad Mre nmmij for tsfaMs at ckUdica. 1 ace that It Bean the gjgaaUHc'of la Vm Tat Onr 3 Tcmra. The Ktaa Yea Ujm Ahns A Hard-Knock. "Tes." said Rimer, "I admit I some times hav trouble wooing my muse." 'That's odd," replied Crittlck, "her feet are so clumsy I don't see how she could get away from you." Ladies Can Wear Shoes One tlxe smaller after using Allen's Foo EaFC. A certain cure for 8voIIcn,sweating, hot, aching feet. At all Druggists, 25c. Ac cept no substitute. Trial pnck?ge FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y. Occasionally there is a man wise enough to think poetry without writ ing it Lewis' Single Binder cigar richest, nort ratfefving smoke on the market. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HI. Running for office costs almost as much as running an automobile. iM Z&02&ii Dainty, Crisp, Brassy Summer Skirts are a delight to the re&rf woman erery where. In order to get this result see that the material is good, that it is cut in the latest fashion and use alSISISGB Stars h imu 111 in the laundry. All three things are im-i portast. bnt the last is absolutely neces sary. No matter how line the material or how daintily made, bad starch and poor laundry work will spoil the effect and ruin the -clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH is pure, will not rot the clothes nor cause them to crack. It sells at ioc a sixteen ounce package everywhere. Other starches, much inferior, sell at ioc for twelve ounce package. Insist on getting DEFIANCE STARCH and be sure of results. Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, Nebraska. , And Other Crimes. The gravity of tbe.crjme of Hf; amy appears todepend, qnlfe. largely upon the criminals bnslncss roassr Uons-aad social acaaalatsacr Cat amhma Journal. , ' v - 1 ; Kruist's Headache Cap lea far everia- dalceace food or driak. DrnasJata, See. Neman Lichty Mfg. Ce, Dea Memos,, la. - - rf Wham an tto lamely penale redeem their faces with their eeasact this wW, be a fan world. Lewia' Single Binder atnicht 5c dear it: rood quality all the thee. Year dealer ec Lewia' Factory, Peoria, UL Even if you gate but am.mcbyosf haven't put your best foot forward in vain. " , Mr. "Wlcatew Seetktar Ryrm. For cbildrea teetblac, aof ten the guna, rcdacw fe f.-nm.tn f "y- riren irtni 1 Itr ScatetUa. Tour success will never be finally destroyed until you have lost hope, energy, integrity and bravery. mmmsmmssmTsBVvB GuBr2 III lift Vwfl MamS MP IMMbTI1 tr voo use TIE WMrfUNeUli Wejaanasaatfcis. Wana wemtber and heavy work caaae aore aacks asd akoal ders which prevent yoar hones worms or decrsasa their services by oaa-hatf a heavy loss to yoa. Sore bones cam ba worked evacy day ia the and will heal at the same tisse. Wellhorseswill sore. Made far era! fartniae aad draft sor- poses it wiu outlast three old-style cellars. Nebraska State Agricultural Farm and Eareri raeatal Stations use the BjeaMai CoMar. Sold subject to 15 days trial whea ased oa sere, hortes. Oae collar fits every bone. Write lor particulars aad testimonials to mUHiOE BORSC COLLAX CO. SO. tTM ST. SORE SHOULDERS X woald Hke very araeh to peworally nwt every reader of this paper wbo otraa any hone that have EreWia2l toll him amt Lecertty Oall Salve This la imposslblo so 1 sat golnc to tell 70a SS& rknow- tact hones werktes wttb son shonlden an In pain, and that they caado as amch work wlthont ranniuc down as when they are "tm front pcln. 1 also know perfectly well that Scenitty GaH Salve will can tne koIden. but oedonotkacwlt. If you old y.u wbnyabos of yonr dealer ak ones and. can thoai an. for yoe hareTOrab often wished that you kwew ofse-a- -thine yen could ralyon. Voneaawlyabaolutelyoa SMyQallvo. ISwUldolWworteTeTyt&e. . r It xta nrefer to try It tr 1 wllljnall yon ssatMeeaaSee. Jact write for i-lwlU go fo jot , C,aEoI want to tefl yoa thatSeearlty AnepU. Hcal-rU as food for barb wte eato sa SeejrtW Gall Salve Is lor harness sjalla. . Pealen carry them In S-. ate and CLia sites. Csethestforyonraaede . I caaraateo yon perfect satisfaction. Frank D. Denote. President. SECURITY CEMENT CO- Minneapolis. Xtaa SPECIAL AGENT WANTED a every town to handle high grade gold, copper and Industrial securities. Kicluslrc territory j:lTcn:onlj men of high character considered. Ulvrage.presea. occupat'un and references In HM letter. Uurapccia. agents make f torn CWtotl.eW per month. Write - today 'lftr. Uskkkai. 8u riUTit CoFAX.f SI b. Broad -war, Los Aacctcs, Cai. UVE STSCI AH? CfsTVATVBCS HISCELUltZSUS euwinui irb larreat variety for eale as the lowwt prices by s.a KueeeKswsrAraacaw.tsw, itist..niisi W. N..U., OMAHA. NO. 29, 1907. i? tHIKItftlfLnl- mmmwmmmmmmmF vfjWvK m eh fcamr and sores BII.1 Vm ever BEs:aCSEBw? v -f ...A 'Cfl fc- .! j-f S- w -"r . rZitf? '' 5z?lk. . i-&- ;Aife nfJf t&'jr S-,S ?i . .,.... sigg - &.j&zj&.!. -yf.gsSyv-v tt ir-'9v iiK IdllTT? ZJ : i3 z.'f igjA f ctj r tJt&Sii